Archive for the ‘favorite annuals’ Category

Sweet Verbena


Sweet plants-you know what I mean.  No landscape can be structured around them.  Unless you are up close, you might not notice them.  Should you have a cottage garden, your best view of your sweet plants are when you cut and place them in a vintage milk bottle on the table. Sweet plants are lax growing, weedy-gorgeously natural.  Some sweet plants are so sweet, they do not last cut more than a few hours.  The British version of Country Living magazine-I treasure every issue.  The Brits grow every sweet plant successfully in their mild climate-how I so envy them their endless varieites of snowdrops, the auricula primroses, the frittilarias, the columbines, the Noisette roses,  the belladonna and bellamosa delphiniums-all of those sweet plants who would black out and fall to the ground weeping in my midwestern garden.  But we have a few plants available that can satisfy a midwestern gardener’s sweet tooth.  


Trailing verbena-sweet.  For years I avoided growing them.  Prone to mildew and every other fungal disases affecting plants-who has time for this?  Recent breeding has vastly improved the disease resistance of this class of annual plants.  I gave them a second look.  My garden will never ever remotely resemble a beautifully graceful English garden.  Can you hear me sigh?  The trailing verbenas are a plant group I would recommend-should a little dose of sweet suit you. They endow my garden with a little bit of that English country garden I so love. 

They come in a wide range of colors.  White, lavender, lavender star, purple, royal purple-the list is long.  The Lanai series is my favorite-these cultivars are amazingly disease resistant, heavy blooming, and long lived.  My trailing verbenas last long into the fall, given proper culture. 

This cherry red verbena-new to me.  I have no name to pass on.  It is more upright than most.  I am only able to water my pots once a day-when I get home.  Should it be 95 degrees all day, they may wilt down, but this verbena does not expire. The sweet chery verbena has a will of iron to survive.  Sweet plants with a formidable will to live-keep them.

Lanai verbena lavender star is my favorite trailing verbena.  The white and lavender star mix in the blooms makes for a very showy addition to any container planting.  I have had them performing as late as October-no kidding.  I have been so bold as to plant trailing verbenas in ground-they do great. Should you commit to these plants-be advised.  They need to have their dead flower heads removed regularly.  Maybe daily.  Should you be a once a week gardener, please disregard my enchantment with verbena.  If you keep up with the deaheading, thiese plants will reward your garden.

Sweet plants cozy up to other plants in their neighborhood. They never mean to imply they are the star of the show.  They wrote the book on what it means to be a member of a community. Sweet and unassuming they are.  But I love how they grow vigorously, and horizontally, and bloom heavily.  They weave in and out of whatever else is in their neighborhood. So sweet, and so persistent.  They take on, and grow up in concert with, any number of neighbors.   This I like about them.   


New trailing verbena varieties-this bicolor version is an example.  I have no opinion about it-I am trying it for the first time this season.  Successful gardening is much about trying plants that are new to you.  Some you will give a berth in your garden.  I watch and assess everything that goes into the ground in my garden.  Given my small space, why shouldn’t I?  The sweet plants-they will not carry me to the other side.  But when they are good, they are very very good. Have some gardening room for some sweet? 

Plant them-those sweet verbenas.

Petunias

 

Being the fan of single flowers that I am, I do like petunias.  The simple trumpet shaped flowers come in a wide range of forms and colors.  The bloom their hearts out, asking little in return. Even the lax and weedy growing species petunia integrifolia is lovely in a cottage garden.  Caring for them is very easy-a little benign neglect can be beneficial.  All that seems to bother them is cool and very rainy weather.  It seems like every year new varieties come to market, and I find few I wouldn’t have.  This supertunia vista silverberry small flowered petunia with a carmine throat is prolific in bloom.  Though graceful and delicate in appearance, it is tough enough to survive the care of a brownie scout going for her first badge. 

The mini petunias are great little mixers.  They go well with other petunias, licorice, diamond frost euphorbia-even plectranthus. If petunias seem to peter out for you later in the summer, a very light and every so often trim back and regular feeding can keep them going late into the season.

The wave series of petunias are very strong spreaders.  Purple wave is a shockingly intense carmine color-wow.  One plant can cover a lot of ground with a lot of color.  They seem to want more water than other petunias, but that is easy enough to supply. Don’t be afraid to plant them far apart in ground-they fill in as soon as the weather gets warm.  Though petunias are tolerant of cool weather, I like to wait until the soil gets warm before I plant them. They are native to Argentina, not Michigan.

This pot of mixed petunias and red parasol mandevillea is a lot of look. Single flowers are striking; masses of single flowers make a big statement. A little frivolous yes-but who wouldn’t welcome a little frivolity now and then?

Petunias make good neighbors. I like mixed pots-should the season not favor one plant or another, the entire pot is not a loss.  Verbena and million bells both have that rambling habit; the variation in flower shape and size has a naturally beautiful appearance. Everyone here is singing their own tune, but it all seems to harmonize.

This fuchsia petunia is also from the Vista series-I like how they perform.  Though the pink hibiscus standards are the star of the show, the small petunias add lots of texture and volume.  The hibiscus trees are weighted visually at the bottom. 

This double white petunia is new to me this year.  The grower fussed about its tendency to get leggy.  Any plants shortcomings is likely to be mitigated by another plant that softens the fault. You just have to find the right plant.   In this case, the euphorbia hides those long legs.

Neon is an apt name for this petunia.  I am especially interested in how the yellow throat sets off that carmine pink so dramatically.  This petunia can soften up the habit of an orange marigold without diluting its best feature-that electric orange.   


Should all that excitement prove to be too much for you, there is always a white petunia.  Or in this case, a vanilla petunia.  It is a soft white that looks good with everything.  I am bemused by those who find petunias entirely too pedestrian.  They do a great job of looking fresh and dressed up every day of the summer.

At A Glance: White Cosmos

 

Lady Miss Deadly, Datura Metel

Datura metel is classified as an herb growing to three feet tall.  This description does not begin to describe the plant.  The upfacing flowers are incredibly beautiful; they open late, and fade early in the heat of the following day.  Lots of flowers have this habit-morning glories, moonflowers and daylilies are but a few.  None of the aforementioned have the size, substance or presence of datura metel, but they are easy to care for.  Cultivating datura metel is not for the faint of heart.  Should you handle this plant-wash your hands.  

Their  felted leaves are large; the plants love the heat.  A summer planting asking for considerable scale and enormous impact-datura comes to mind.  Though there is a hybrid known as Belle Blanche, I favor the species.  It grows vigorously, and sometimes survives my Michigan weather. 


The giant and elongated buds-I would think a photographic essay about datura would certainly merit a book.  The flowers interest me, no matter the stage.  I would not describe any annual flowers in terms of their drama-save datura.  The Sarah Bernstein of annual plants-datura could be best described as pure beauty.  This pure beauty comes with a price tag.   


How eloquent, this faded blossom.  Deadheading datura-dangerous.  Every part of the plant is highly toxic.   Infused with the poisonous tropane alkyloid; if you grow datura, you are aware you need to wash thoroughly after handling this plant.   Taking off a leaf results in a foul and scary smell  that says all.  Danger Miss Deadly-that would be datura. 

The danger does not deter me from growing datura.  I am able to keep my hands out of my mouth after handling them, and keep every dead bloom off the ground.  The foul smell of the leaves speaking of danger is more than offset by the delicious perfume of the flowers.  This old English iron cistern we placed at the road; the daturas say hello and welcome.  The sun at 7am will soon influence the blooms to close, and drop.  By 9am, the late afternoon early morning display is finished.  

I took this photograph of the cistern at 5:45 am.  In full sun, the daturas handle the light and the heat.  The foliage is medium green; the leaves hairy.   Very early on, they look engagingly bluish. Does not your garden read so differently, given the time of day?  I so like plants that respond to light; datura, entirely light reactive.  

A sunny morning-they are not deterred.  Rob moved this cistern to the road, and planted these datura.  Every day, this chunk of a cistern pot loaded with datura, double petunias and euphorbia says hi when I pull up.  I would be hard pressed to ignore this.  A big and bold herb that can deal with heat-my kind of plant. 


The flowers-incredible.  Really incredible. A datura shrub in full bloom-who would not take time to marvel about the miracle that is nature?